Imrat Khan

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Imrat Khan (born November 17, 1935) is India's leading publicly active surbahar (bass sitar) player, younger brother of sitar player Vilayat Khan.

[edit] Training and early career

Imrat was born in Calcutta into a family of musicians tracing its pedigree back for several generations, to the court musicians of the Mughal rulers. His father was Enayat Khan (18951938), recognised as a leading sitar and surbahar player of his time, as had been the grandfather, Imdad Khan (18481920), before him. His father died when Imrat was a child, so he was raised by his mother, Bashiran Begum, and her father, singer Bande Hassan Khan. In 1944, the family moved with rising star Vilayat to Bombay and sent Imrat to uncle Wahid Khan. Wahid Khan was a surbahar player, and taught Imrat on the instrument in the family style, known as the Imdadkhani gharana (school), or Etawah gharana, after a village outside Agra where Imdad Khan lived.

In 1952 Vilayat and Imrat moved in together in Calcutta. For years they would perform together, but had a falling-out after which they were for a long time not on speaking terms. From the 1960s onwards, Imrat has performed and recorded solo, playing both sitar and surbahar.

[edit] Solo career and legacy

For decades, Imrat has recorded extensively on both his instruments. His full performance practice starts with a surbahar alap in dhrupad ang (embellished with more romantic touches), followed by a shorter alap on the sitar leading into gat in traditional Imdadkhani style. (Sitar players such as Ravi Shankar and Nikhil Banerjee added bass strings to their sitars to achieve at least some of the surbahar's lower range on a single instrument).

He has toured to Europe, the Americas, and East and Southeast Asia. Surbahar players are rare today, and with the possible exception of Smt. Annapurna Devi who has not performed in public for many decades, Imrat is the greatest living exponent.

Imrat has four sons, Nishat, Irshad, Wajahat and Shafaatullah, who are all classical musicians: Nishat plays the sitar, Wajahat concentrates on the sarod and Shafaatullah is accomplished on sitar, tabla, and surbahar. The surbahar tradition, however is largely upheld by Irshad, who has made some very traditional solo recordings; he is also a very fine sitar player.

Imrat Khan currently spends a portion of each year teaching classical Indian music and instructing students in the sitar at Washington University in Saint Louis. In addition to his sons, Brian Jones of the Rolling Stones, and George Harrison of The Beatles (who also studied under Ravi Shankar) have been some of his famous students.

[edit] External links